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Queens of the East

or "Hey Scott, what is this new series all about , anyway?"As historian Warwick Ball put it, “History can never resist
a warrior queen” – and, well, neither can I.Of course, since most ancient societies were patriarchal, the most
common way for women to exercise political power was through their children or
husbands.When first listening to Mike
Duncan’s “The History of Rome” (THoR) podcast series, I remember being
intrigued by the characters of Julia Domna and Julia Maesa.For years, I’ve been playing with the idea of
writing a book on that family, who had so much influence on Roman affairs
during the Severan Dynasty.A few months
ago, when this thought had bubbled up again, it was countered, for the first
time, by another thought – “I don’t write books, I do podcasts.”Which was actually a fruitful admission,
since it got me thinking about the subject in new ways.

But, of course, Mike had already covered the Emesa clan both
so well in THoR that there was no point in revisiting the topic unless I thought
I had something new and interesting to contribute.During my initial research, my memory was
jogged by a few offhand remarks connecting the Emesa clan with both Queen
Zenobia of Palmyra and Queen Cleopatra of Egypt.Didn’t Zenobia claim to be descended from
Cleopatra, and wasn’t Emesa supposed to provide some of the “connective tissue”
between these two legendary Queens of the East?

This was the moment of “inspiration” (typically defined as “the
split-second between having a great idea and realizing there is no way it will
work”).When I started to “connect the
dots” I expected to find enormous, unbridgeable gaps that would make any
connection between Cleopatra and Zenobia implausible at best.But, much to my surprise and growing
excitement, I found more (and more solid) connections that I’d expected, and
the thought began to cross my mind that I just might be on to something.

The centerpiece of the series was, and is, Emesa – modern
Homs in Syria.During most of Roman
history, Syria always seemed to exist on the periphery – an alien land from
which victorious Roman generals (like Vespasian) or horrible Roman Emperors
(yes, I’m looking at you Elagabalis) emerged, to take their central place in
the story of Rome.But the history of
the whole Syrian region, from the Assyrians, to the Chaldeans, to the Persians,
to the Macedonians, to the Arabs and Romans, always seemed interesting enough
to me to warrant its own podcast series.

One of my earlier ideas for a follow-on series to The
Ancient World was to cover the history of the ancient Near East between 500 BC
and the Muslim conquest - but that always seemed too complex and daunting a
project.Months ago, I started thinking
of the possibility of covering the same time-period through the lens of a
particular city – say Babylon, Antioch, or Aleppo – as waves of conquerors and
immigrants washed back and forth across the region.But now suddenly, I thought there might be an
even better lens – why not tell the history of the ancient Near East from the
perspective of a particular family?And
what if that family also happened to be the same bloodline that connected
Cleopatra to Zenobia?

A single series that could combine my love of the Near East,
my desire to cover a different historical period, and my interest in the Emesa
clan?And one that could leverage
the history already covered in my earlier podcast, as well as in THoR, to build on?Well, ideas that
bring that many mental threads together don’t come along every day, so I
obviously dove in with a vengeance.Even
off the bat, the story of Cleopatra’s daughter Selene seemed insanely
compelling.In 4 years, she went from
future Queen of Crete and Cyrenaica to Roman prisoner, then bounced back to run
a major North African kingdom.I mean…what??All of this really happened??Does nobody know about this??Because this is a story that deserves to be
out there, or at least better known.As
a bonus, it also meant that I got to research and write about Roman North
Africa, about which I knew next to nothing.

Other descendants have their own interesting stories to tell,
all of which will be revealed in time.The beginning of the series has been fairly Rome-heavy, mainly due to Selene’s
adoption into Octavia’s family, and the fact that both she and Juba were raised
alongside so many famous figures.In the
next generation, Ptolemy of Mauretania is a direct blood-cousin of Germanicus
(for instance), which also keeps the Rome connection fairly strong.But as both physical distance, and the
distance of generations, increases, my plan is to give Rome comparable
treatment to Parthia and other Eastern kingdoms.In the meantime, I’m attempting to provide
enough general Roman history for any listeners who may not have heard THoR
without belaboring a subject that Mike Duncan has already covered so well.

One of the original ideas I toyed with for the series name
was “Queens of the East.”The reasons I
decided against it were, first, there were a lot of connecting generations where
the heir in question was male and, second, I didn’t want to give away the game
too quick.But now that all stands
revealed, I’m proud to announce the unofficial tag-line for the series:
“Cleopatra to Zenobia or Bust!”

“To the tumultuous throng which crowded under these
porticoes the solitude of death has succeeded.The silence of the tomb is substituted for the hum of polite places.” –
Count C.F.C deVolney, The Ruins, or
Meditations on the Revolutions of Empires “The elevation of
Odaenathus and Zenobia appeared to reflect new splendor on their country, and
Palmyra, for a while, stood forth the rival of Rome; but the competition was
fatal, and ages of prosperity were sacrificed to a moment of glory.” – Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the
Roman Empire “When the sand seems to disappear, not beneath the verdure
of an oasis but beneath an accumulation of marble and worked stones, silence
falls among the travelers…it is then that a man, even the least civilized,
feels himself to be small and, despite himself, meditates on the presence of
that mighty ru…

Synopsis: Seleucus I Nicator forges the Seleucid Empire, and
his descendants spend the next century struggling to preserve his legacy.

“In Asia, after the defeat of Demetrius at Gaza in Syria,
Seleucus, receiving from Ptolemy no more than eight hundred foot soldiers and
about two hundred horse, set out for Babylon.” – Diodorus Siculus, The Library of History, Book XIX